Constitutional Law I Notes (August 14, 2023)
Constitutional Law I Notes (August 14, 2023)
Constitutional Law I Notes (August 14, 2023)
Constitution - the written instrument enacted by direct action of the people by which
the fundamental powers of the government are established, limited and defined, and by
which those powers are distributed among the several departments for their safe and
useful exercise for the benefit of the body politic.
~
It should be stressed that when it comes to certain basic individual rights, such
as religious freedom, it is not the Constitution that creates or confers them. The
correct view is that the Constitution merely recognizes and protects these rights
and does not bring them into existence.
The Constitution is not “the origin of private rights; it is not the fountain of law nor
the incipient state of government; it is not the cause but the consequence of personal
and political freedom.”
The Constitution is the basic and paramount law to which all other laws must
conform and to which all persons, including the highest officials of the land, must defer.
1
The first consists of a series of prescriptions setting forth the fundamental civil
and political rights of the citizens and imposing limitations on the powers of government
as a means of securing the enjoyment of those
rights. These are found principally in Article III of our Constitution, and also in Articles II,
IV, V, and XII.
The third consists of the provisions pointing out the mode or procedure in
accordance with which formal changes in the fundamental law may be brought about.
These are found in Article XVII of our Constitution.
Of particular importance also is the rule that, in case of doubt, the constitution
should be considered self-executing rather than non-self-executing; mandatory rather
than directory; and prospective rather than retrospective.
2
A non-self-executing provision is one that remains dormant unless it is
activated by legislative implementation. An example is Article II, Section 4, which
provides that in the fulfillment of the prime duty of defending the State “all citizens may
be required under conditions provided by law to render personal military or civil service.”
Such a requirement cannot be imposed until and unless the legislature so wills, through
the passage of a law specifying the conditions. Another example is Article IV, Section 3,
providing that “Philippine citizenship may be lost or reacquired in the manner provided
by law.” This provision does not cause the loss or recovery of citizenship. It is the
implementing statute that will.
Unless the contrary is clearly intended, the provisions of the constitution should
be considered self-executing, as a contrary rule would give the legislature discretion to
determine when, or whether, they shall be effective.
Amendment or Revision
One illustration will suffice. In People v. Pomar™ decided in 1924, our Supreme
Court declared unconstitutional a law granting maternity leave privileges to female
employees on the ground that it impaired the obligationof contracts. At present,
however, although the impairment clause has not undergone any change in language
since then, such privileges are a commonplace. Social legislation has been sustained
under the expanded concept of the police power as a valid limitation of the freedom of
contract.
3
There are provisions of the Constitution, though, which arc not as malleable to
judicial interpretation, what Cooley calls the “iron rules,” because they cannot be altered
except by formal amendment. Examples are the provisions for the age qualifications of
certain officers or for their term of office. The composition of the Commission on Audit,
to take another illustration, cannot be reduced or increased by a mere court decision.
Thus, there was mere amendment of the Constitution of 1935 when the term of
office of the President of the Philippines was changed from six to four years. But there
was a revision when the Constitutional Commission of 1986 rewrote the Marcos charter
and produced what is now the Constitution of 1987.
PREAMBLE
ARTICLE IV Citizenship
ARTICLE V Suffrage
4
ARTICLE VIII Judicial Department
ARTICLE XIV Education, Science and Technology, Arts, Culture and Sports
Lecture Notes
Constitution
5
Modalities to Amend the Constitution
1, Constituent Assembly – ¾ votes (Lambino Case: 6M = 12% total number of
registered voters; 3% total number of district voters).
2, Constitutional Convention
California Test
1. Quantitative Test (Lambino Case: you count the number of provisions that
will be affected by the proposal. Higher number – Revision, Lower number –
amendment).
2. Qualitative Test
Sep 1
- Preamble
- Article I, II, XVII
- All of the 7 cases